The wider street overwhelmed Caleb. After the suffocating confines of the alley, the sudden space and noise sent his senses reeling. Merchants hawked their wares. Cart wheels clattered over uneven cobblestones. A burst of laughter from a nearby tavern made him flinch so hard a spike of pain shot through his side.
Just get away. Find somewhere safe. Don't look back.
He pressed himself against the nearest building, trying to become invisible in the shadow of an overhanging second story. His throat throbbed with each ragged breath, the ghost of Rufan's fingers still wrapped around it. Only the constant effect of [Ignore Pain] kept him upright. That and the cold certainty that Narbok might round the corner at any moment.
A woman carrying a basket of vegetables gave him a wide berth, her nose wrinkling at his bloodied appearance. Two guards in leather armor glanced his way, and Caleb's heart hammered against his damaged ribs. But they merely sneered and continued their patrol.
He couldn't run aimlessly. Every panicked step without purpose increased his chances of being cornered again. A horse's nicker cut through the morning air from a nearby side street, the sound an anchor in the chaos.
It sparked a comforting memory fragment: the earthy smell of hay, the quiet munching of horses, and the simple, burrowed-in safety of the Hearthsong Inn's hayloft. Thal had slept there sometimes, curled in the hay when home became too dangerous.
But accessing even that one safe memory was like opening a floodgate through the emotional rollercoaster he was on. The moment the connection to Thal’s past was made, [Perfect Memory] flooded him with more than just a location; he lived the life attached to it. The sting of "dull-ears" burned his cheeks. The suffocating terror of Rufan's drunken rages, hands reaching for his throat time and time again. The hollowing loneliness of a child who smiled and joked because the alternative was acknowledging that nobody truly cared.
The memories were flawlessly preserved, like insects in amber. A thousand small humiliations. A hundred nights spent shivering in places that weren't home. The desperate performance of being everyone's friend because being alone meant being vulnerable.
A hot spike of guilt rose in his throat.
This feels so wrong. I'm a ghost, a parasite using a dead boy's moments of sanctuary as my own personal escape map.
A sour taste was left in his mouth. He was a thief of memories, picking through the pieces of a life cut short. Every memory he accessed felt like another violation of a child who'd already suffered too much. But the cold, pragmatic part of his mind—the part that had navigated corporate politics and budget proposals—understood the brutal mathematics of survival. To live, he had to use what Thal knew. The Hearthsong Inn was his destination.
With a target fixed, Caleb's analytical mind began reasserting control. He forced his gait to shift from a panicked scuttle to something more purposeful. Head down, shoulders hunched, moving like someone with somewhere to be rather than someone running away.
The rhythmic clang of hammer on metal drew his attention first. Through the wide entrance of a forgeworks, orange-white flame danced in the heart of a massive forge. A burly man, arms like tree trunks, brought his hammer down on glowing steel. Sparks fountained upward. The piece hissed as it plunged into a quenching barrel.
Racks of weapons and tools lined the walls, each piece crafted for violent functionality and stripped of all ornamentation or artistry. Swords designed to cleave bone. Hammers meant to crush stone or skull with equal efficiency.
The same kind of tool that could have caved in his skull moments ago. He imagined one of those hammers in Narbok's hands, and a fresh wave of nausea roiled in his gut. Different from the hammers back home, used for building decks or hanging pictures. Here, they were built to break people.
Farther along, Caleb found himself in the heart of the commercial district. A large alchemist shop occupied a corner lot like a monument to success. Pale stone and ash wood formed its pristine walls—a sterile beacon amid weathered timber buildings. A copper sign depicting a green vial caught the light overhead. Behind spotless windows, vials of bright red liquid stood in neat rows, their contents glowing faintly against black velvet. It was the kind of place that solved problems for people with full purses.
As Caleb watched, a nervous-looking man exited a nearby storefront. He scurried to the opulent facade and placed a small leather pouch on a decorative stone ledge near the door. He glanced around, his movements jerky, before retreating back inside his own building.
A moment later, a man in impeccably tailored light clothing rounded the corner. He moved with an easy, pleasant gait, smiling warmly at a passing woman. Smoothly palming the pouch, he entered the shop's doorway. Without a glance at the pouch he tucked it away, his friendly smile never faltering.
Down a narrow lane, he passed another alchemist shop that crouched in darkness, appearing to devour the surrounding illumination. The black wood seemed to consume the light, deepening the shadows around it. One smoked-glass window blocked any glimpse inside, turning the street into a warped mirror. A brass mortar and pestle dangled from weathered chains above the entrance, green with age and neglect. The shop waited in silence. It squatted there as if it had grown from the earth itself, indifferent to customers or their coin.
Stolen from its rightful place, this narrative is not meant to be on Amazon; report any sightings.
Caleb caught his reflection in the dark glass, and his breath hitched.
For a dizzying second, a stranger stared back at him. A boy’s face. Gaunt. Young.
That’s not me.
He didn’t have time for the existential crisis in that image. He thrust his concentration onto the immediate damage: the bruised cheek, the torn clothes, blood crusted under his fingernails.
Forcing himself to continue on, he eventually found a building that stirred Thal's memories with raw longing. The Adventurer's Hall towered like a fortress of dark stone and massive timber beams. Thal's memories painted it in shades of awe—a place where heroes gathered, where glory and gold changed hands, where a half-elf boy could dream of being something more.
A bulletin board taller than he was stood near the entrance, so thickly layered with parchments that the wood beneath was nearly invisible. Even from across the street, he could see official-looking seals and what appeared to be bounty sketches. Armed figures moved in and out of its doors with casual confidence. A woman in gleaming mail hefted a sword that probably weighed more than Katie's entire body. A man with scars crisscrossing his face counted coins into a leather pouch, his other hand resting on a dagger hilt.
These were killers. Professional killers who made their living in the wilds or off those essence stone dungeons Thal's memories hinted at. The kind of people who would have carved through Narbok's gang like butter, who faced death as casually as Caleb had once faced morning traffic.
Turning away, he let Thal's memories guide his feet through well-worn paths. Three more turns and The Hearthsong Inn stood before him, a haven of warmth. Four stories of rich heartwood and elven-carved beams caught the morning sun, the intricate designs casting delicate shadows across weathered wood. Smoke drifted lazily from stone chimneys into the clear sky. The warm, rich aroma of fresh bread mingled with roasting meat and the sweet undercurrent of mead.
For one moment, the sensory embrace felt like home. Like belonging.
Belonging existed in a different world. The front entrance would bring inquiries he had to avoid. Caleb circled the main doors, tracking the building's perimeter to the adjoining stables. The village sounds dimmed, replaced by the peaceful munching of horses and the whisper of straw.
He slipped through the stable doors, trading warm food smells for the earthier scent of animals and dried grass. A few horses regarded him with mild interest before returning to their feed. No stable hands in sight. A small mercy.
The ladder to the hayloft protested under his mass, each rung sending splinters into his already torn palms. Sharp agony lanced through his side. The bruise on his neck pulsed with a dull fire. Every muscle felt like it had been worked over with hammers.
But he made it.
Caleb collapsed into loose hay, and the careful control he'd maintained gave way completely. The adrenaline that had carried him this far drained away, leaving only the bleak reality of what had happened.
He'd been beaten by children. Terrorized by boys young enough to be his kids. The brief thrill of survival—those strange skill notifications appearing like unlocks in a video game—evaporated, leaving only the visceral memory of helplessness and pain.
I'm not a fighter. I'm a 41-year-old middle manager who liked his quiet life.
The thought carried the conviction of absolute truth. Every instinct he possessed screamed for him to hide, to become invisible, to find some quiet corner. A desperate, animal need took the place of a plan: the instinct to become too insignificant to notice. But even that primal urge for safety was no match for what came next. As the pathetic impulse to simply disappear settled in his gut, the emotional dam finally broke. His memory transformed from gift to curse, each recollection knife-sharp and merciless.
Evelynn's triumphant laugh as she laid down a winning hand in their weekly card game. Her eyes sparkling with competitive glee as she scooped up his chips. "Better luck next time, mister MBA." The clean, powdery scent of Jack's hair after his bath, when he was still young enough to tolerate his father reading him bedtime stories. That specific heft of a drowsy child leaning against his chest, small fingers curled around his thumb. Katie rolling her eyes at one of his terrible dad jokes, but the corner of her mouth twitching with suppressed amusement. "Ugh, Dad, you're so lame." But she'd said it with affection that made the words feel like a hug.
Saturday morning pancakes. Sunday afternoon football. Mundane arguments about whose turn it was to take out the trash. A thousand tiny moments that had seemed so ordinary, so forgettable, now preserved in excruciating detail by something he'd chosen to keep them alive.
The memories pressed down on him, suffocating. The unbreachable gulf of this new reality left only silence and distance. They would grow old, grieve, and move on without him, forgetting the exact sound of his laugh while he remembered theirs with unmatched fidelity until the day this borrowed body finally died.
The memories.
They weren't just his own. Another life forced in, preserved and uninvited. Thalorin's life. Every fragment he used for survival was stolen from a boy who would never use them again. The disgust was a physical thing, a sour heat rising in his throat. This second chance was a theft.
The sobs came then, violent and ugly. His body shook as grief poured out of him like a broken dam. He wept for his family. For himself. And for Thalorin.
He coiled in the hay, trying to shrink into a space smaller than his anguish. Sunlight broke through the wallboards, illuminating the particles of dust suspended in the air. Somewhere below, a horse nickered softly. The world continued its indifferent spin while Caleb Foster broke apart in a hayloft that smelled of dried grass and borrowed sorrow.
Time became elastic, meaningless. Minutes or hours passed in a haze. The sun tracked across the sky, shadows shifting through the barn, but Caleb remained curled in his nest of misery.
His sobs eventually subsided, leaving a hollow ache. His thoughts, desperate for something concrete, returned to the chain of events.
The crash. The pain. The nothingness.
Then the white room.
It was the order of it all that felt so strange now. The chaos of his death and this new life was bisected by a moment of sterile, logical process. A menu. A selection. A confirmation.
It felt so... deliberate. The process was mechanical, like an intake form.
The thought was unsettling. It felt like an installation. What kind of system processed souls like new software? The question hung in the quiet air, a mystery with no immediate answer.
Then a voice cut through his sobs, warm but edged with weary concern.
"Thal? Is that you up there? The stable boy said he heard you crying again."
The final word hung in the quiet, dusty air. Again. The word implied this was routine, a familiar sorrow in a life that had made such tears unremarkable.
Caleb's breath caught in his throat, grief interrupted by sudden fear. Someone who knew Thal. Someone who would expect answers, responses, mannerisms he didn't possess.
The ladder creaked.

